A329 near Moulsford Yellow Wagtail: Nr Silly bridge - single bird flew from amongst the sheep, which were being moved to a new pasture directly opposite. Maybe the YW's will move with them...?. SU5885. 08:50.

Caspian Gull - 3rd summer Polish ringed. I can only be sure of this bird's age because I saw it as a 1st summer at Sutton Courtenay on 24th July 2014 (when it appeared to have mixed characters with mich). Awaiting details from the Polishing Bird Ringing Centre
Yellow-l Gull - 25+ (on FI)
Great B-b Gull - 2
Common Gull - 1sts
Common Tern - 30
Sanderling - 2

Picture the scene; it is early morning on 21st June 2011 and Polish bird ringer Krzysztof Załuski is making his way to the village of Kleszewo in the province of Mazowieckie, some 70km due north of Warsaw. Krzysztof’s mission is to ring a brood of White Storks in the village. He climbs up to the nest and finds a brood of four healthy youngsters. He fits each of the young birds with a metal ring on one leg and a plastic colour-ring on the other. The purpose of the colour-rings being to enable the bird to be identified with the aid of a pair of binoculars, rather than having to capture it. One of the colour-rings was Green Z1213, and that particular bird is the subject of this story.

White Stork Otmoor RSPB courtesy of Elementerry

This unfortunate bird, along with 21 other White Storks, collided with power lines on migration south from Poland in, it is believed, 2014. In the same year Shorelands Wildlife Gardens, based at Dickleburgh, near Diss, imported all of these wild and injured White Storks from Poland to their centre amidst fears, apparently, that the Polish winter would be too cold for these birds, At Dickleburgh, the birds were being rehabilitated under the care and treatment of staff at Shorelands. And in November 2015 Shorelands were delighted to announce that several of the birds had recovered sufficiently to take to the air once again. Shorelands thought they would now have to decide if these White Storks should be transported back to Europe in spring 2016 to join the migration north or whether to wait and see what the birds decided to do?

As for Green Z1213 he (apparently it is a male bird) made his own mind up and decided to go wild again, without any human assistance. After departing Shorelands, it made its way across Norfolk to the Wildfowl & Wetland Trust at Welney where it was first seen on 27th February 2016. It lingered at Welney until 29th February when it flew off north at 10.25am. A mere 25 minutes later it was seen flying over Downham Market. It was located again on 4th March at Lyng, where it remained for three days, before going missing again.

On 10th March a posting on the NarVOS e-group alerted subscribers to the fact that a White Stork had just been seen at Nar Valley Fisheries. Allan and Stewart were among the early observers. And, of course, we know it’s the same White Stork as referred to above because its colour ring Z1213 could be read quite easily through a telescope. It was then that Allan, a licensed bird ringer, decided to seek out the ringing information about this bird. Stewart, for his part, Googled ‘White Stork Green Ring Z1213’ and that is how, between them, they have pieced together this fascinating tale On their sighting reports Birdguides and Rare Bird Alert identify this bird as an Escape, which is technically true. But this is no reared-in-captivity bird. This was once truly wild and it looks as if it is trying to become so again.

There have been further sightings of Z1213, at Wormegay High Bridge on 11th March, then at West Winch Common on 13th, at Blackborough End on 14th and at Setchey on 15th. The last confirmed sighting (at the time of writing) of Z1213 was near the River Nar at Wormegay High Bridge on 19th and again on 21st March. The White Stork sighting on the Isle of Wight on 17th March was clearly not the same bird.

White Stork Otmoor courtesy of Elemeterry

What will happen to Z1213? Will it hang around locally? Will it have the strength or impulse to migrate back to Poland? Will it breed in the wild, in the UK? It’s got to find a mate first, of course! The last British White Stork breeding record is claimed to have been in Edinburgh in 1416. Six hundred years on, who knows what could happen?

In addition to this we know this bird has been seen in Herefordshire recently.Find out more about becoming a member of the brilliant Wildfowl and Wetlands TrustHERE

Great White Egret back again and present up to 11.30 am when I left . There is some suggestion it goes to roost somewhere else and comes back to feed which it was doing keenly.
Also
4 Little egrets
31 Lapwing
2 Gadwall
1 Little Grebe
4 Common Tern
1 Oyster catcher